The Columbia Alumni Association of Michigan invites you to enjoy a special evening with Dr. Katherine Freese, who will be talking about and signing copies of her new book, The Cosmic Cocktail: Three Parts Dark Matter. Dr. Freese is the George E. Uhlenbeck Professor of Physics at the University of Michigan And one of the world’s leading researchers into the mystery of dark matter. Her research is in the area of theoretical cosmology, at the interface of particle physics and astrophysics.

She received her BA in Physics from Princeton University (as far as she knows, she was the second woman to major in Physics at Princeton); her MA in Physics in 1981 from Columbia University; and her PhD in Physics in 1984 from the University of Chicago.

Currently in a three-year position as Director of Nordita, the Institute for Theoretical Physics Of the Nordic countries in Stockholm, she will shed light on her research on dark matter and the origins of the universe.

The Columbia Alumni Association of Michigan invites you to enjoy a special evening with Dr. Katherine Freese, who will be talking about and signing copies of her new book, The Cosmic Cocktail: Three Parts Dark Matter. Dr. Freese is the George E. Uhlenbeck Professor of Physics at the University of Michigan And one of the world’s leading researchers into the mystery of dark matter. Her research is in the area of theoretical cosmology, at the interface of particle physics and astrophysics.

She received her BA in Physics from Princeton University (as far as she knows, she was the second woman to major in Physics at Princeton); her MA in Physics in 1981 from Columbia University; and her PhD in Physics in 1984 from the University of Chicago.

Currently in a three-year position as Director of Nordita, the Institute for Theoretical Physics Of the Nordic countries in Stockholm, she will shed light on her research on dark matter and the origins of the universe.